D
da5id2
New member
Sorry if this posted in the wrong forum, but here goes..
My dad is a pretty serious acoustic player. He has a regular gig on the weekends and also plays with friends fairly often. He owns like 15 acoustic guitars and has a PA setup that he takes with him to gigs.
Recently, he expressed that he would like to be able to record some of his stuff to CD. Now, my dad knows how to use his equipment, but I'm much more technically oriented then he is and I think he would have a hard time picking equipment to start a recording rig. I'm not very well versed with actual recording and mastering terminology, and to be honest I'm not exactly sure what a setup like this would consist of. But that's why I'm posting here, hopefully I'll be able to learn a thing or two. Needless to say, with his birthday and Christmas coming up in the near future, I thought it would be cool if I could get him started with a small recording setup (home setup, not live recording).
Just to give some more background, for his portable rig he has the JBL eon setup with the mixer and four powered speakers (2 large speakers, 2 smaller monitor type speakers). He also uses an alesis drum machine and several effects pedals. I should note that he rarely takes the large speakers to gigs and just uses the smaller speakers as mains, which works well for most venues.
Just from reading up on this a little, it seems like a home recording setup should include the following:
Some sort of mastering device
Speakers
Mixer
Inputs (guitar, mic, drum machine, effects, etc.)
For the mastering device, I came across the Alesis Masterlink ML-9600. Seems like an impressive piece of equipment. As I said above, my dad already owns the alesis SR-16 drum machine for his portable rig and he loves it. So to him, the alesis name means quality, which is important.
For the speakers, it would be great if we could just use the large speakers that he never takes to gigs. They might be too big, but that would save some money if we didn't have to buy speakers. I think these are the speakers:
www2.jblpro.com/catalog/General/Product.aspx?PId=93&MId=3
For the mixer, I am completely in the dark. The large speakers he already has are powered, so the mixer does not need to have an amp if we use those speakers. For number of channels, I think 4 would be enough, but more would always be nice. Other than that I have no idea what to look for.
Let me know if I am completely off the mark with any of this. As I said, I really don't know much about this stuff, I'm really just here to learn. For budget, it would be nice to keep all of this under $1000 but it would be awesome if it was less than that. Used equipment is fine and might even be required to stay under the budget.
All in all, this rig doesn't need to be anything special. Just need something to put his music on a CD. Sorry for the long and involved post and thanks for the help.
EDIT: I would rather not use a computer for any part of this, the alesis masterlink unit should take care of that, right?
My dad is a pretty serious acoustic player. He has a regular gig on the weekends and also plays with friends fairly often. He owns like 15 acoustic guitars and has a PA setup that he takes with him to gigs.
Recently, he expressed that he would like to be able to record some of his stuff to CD. Now, my dad knows how to use his equipment, but I'm much more technically oriented then he is and I think he would have a hard time picking equipment to start a recording rig. I'm not very well versed with actual recording and mastering terminology, and to be honest I'm not exactly sure what a setup like this would consist of. But that's why I'm posting here, hopefully I'll be able to learn a thing or two. Needless to say, with his birthday and Christmas coming up in the near future, I thought it would be cool if I could get him started with a small recording setup (home setup, not live recording).
Just to give some more background, for his portable rig he has the JBL eon setup with the mixer and four powered speakers (2 large speakers, 2 smaller monitor type speakers). He also uses an alesis drum machine and several effects pedals. I should note that he rarely takes the large speakers to gigs and just uses the smaller speakers as mains, which works well for most venues.
Just from reading up on this a little, it seems like a home recording setup should include the following:
Some sort of mastering device
Speakers
Mixer
Inputs (guitar, mic, drum machine, effects, etc.)
For the mastering device, I came across the Alesis Masterlink ML-9600. Seems like an impressive piece of equipment. As I said above, my dad already owns the alesis SR-16 drum machine for his portable rig and he loves it. So to him, the alesis name means quality, which is important.
For the speakers, it would be great if we could just use the large speakers that he never takes to gigs. They might be too big, but that would save some money if we didn't have to buy speakers. I think these are the speakers:
www2.jblpro.com/catalog/General/Product.aspx?PId=93&MId=3
For the mixer, I am completely in the dark. The large speakers he already has are powered, so the mixer does not need to have an amp if we use those speakers. For number of channels, I think 4 would be enough, but more would always be nice. Other than that I have no idea what to look for.
Let me know if I am completely off the mark with any of this. As I said, I really don't know much about this stuff, I'm really just here to learn. For budget, it would be nice to keep all of this under $1000 but it would be awesome if it was less than that. Used equipment is fine and might even be required to stay under the budget.
All in all, this rig doesn't need to be anything special. Just need something to put his music on a CD. Sorry for the long and involved post and thanks for the help.
EDIT: I would rather not use a computer for any part of this, the alesis masterlink unit should take care of that, right?